Finn v. Hoyt

52 F. 83, 1 Alaska Fed. 289
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMay 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 F. 83 (Finn v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finn v. Hoyt, 52 F. 83, 1 Alaska Fed. 289 (D. Alaska 1892).

Opinion

TRUITT, District Judge.

This is an application by the petitioner for a writ of mandamus to issue out of this court, directed to said United States commissioner, commanding him “to proceed, adjudicate, and exercise his judicial functions and discretion,” in a certain action pending in his court, by “rendering some judgment therein, and exercising his jurisdiction in said action until the same shall be legally disposed of by him.” The facts as stated by the petition are that on the 18th day of December, 1891, the petitioner, as plaintiff, commenced an action in the said United States commissioner’s court at Juneau, in this district, against the Eastern Alaska Mining & Mill-, ing Company, a private corporation, as defendant, for the recovery of the sum of $241.78; that on the same day the action was commenced a summons and copy of the complaint in said action were duly served upon said defendant, requiring him to appear and answer said complaint, in the said court, on the 24th day of December, 1891. It further appears that for some reason no’ trial was had upon the day set therefor, but that thereafter the cause was continued from time to time, until January 9, [291]*2911892, “when, upon the application of defendant,” the cause was duly continued until March 4, 1892, in order to enable defendant to take the deposition of one William Ebner to be used by defendant on the trial of said action; that on said last-mentioned day this deposition had not been received by the court, and at the “request of defendant’s counsel plaintiff entered into stipulation with defendant,” whereby the action was again continued until the 7th day of April, 1892, on which day it was set for trial by the court; and that some time after this, and before the 7th day of April, 1892, the said United States commissioner, “in obedience to the process issued out of the United States commissioner’s court at Sitka, Alaska,” left Juneau to appear there, and did not return home until the 8th day of April, 1892, the day after the one set for the trial of said action. From these facts it appears that the said commissioner was necessarily absent from his office on the day when this action should have been tried, but the plaintiff was there ready to proceed, and is certainly guilty of no laches in the matter. Upon this statement of facts the petition alleges that by reason of said absence at Sitka on the said 7th day of April, 1892, the day appointed for the trial of said action, the said United States commissioner “refuses to further act in said case, and render some judgment therein,” or otherwise legally dispose of the same.

The organic act providing a civil government for Alaska, which was approved May 17, 1884, in section S thereof provides — “That there shall be appointed, by the president, four commissioners in and for said district, who shall have jurisdiction and powers of commissioners of the United States circuit courts in any part of said district, but who shall reside, one at Sitka, one at Wrangel, one at Ounalaska, and one at Juneau City. Such commissioners shall exercise all the duties and powers, civil and criminal, now conferred on justices of the peace under the general laws of the state of Oregon, so far as the same may be applicable in said district, and may not be in conflict with this act or the laws of the United' States.”

Thus by an act of congress the general laws in force at that date in the state of Oregon were adopted as the [292]*292laws of the district of Alaska, so far as applicable and not in conflict with the act itself or the laws of the United States, and as that part of said act which confers the jurisdiction of justices of the peace of said state upon said commissioners is applicable in this district, and not in conflict with the organic act or the laws of the United States, it is the law of the district; and we must therefore look to the laws of Oregon relating to justices of the peace for the jurisdiction, powers, and duties of these commissioners, when acting under or by virtue of the authority conferred by this part of said act, and, wherever the supreme court of said state has made decisions defining and prescribing them, such decisions should be received by said commissioners as the correct and binding interpretation of these laws.

A justice’s court in Oregon is one of inferior and limited jurisdiction, deriving all its powers and authority by statute, without any of the presumptions in favor of the regularity of its proceedings which are indulged in favor of a court of record, and for these reasons it is necessary to examine the statutes to ascertain what its powers and duties are. Section 2051, Code Or., is as follows:

“The civil jurisdiction of justices’ courts, and by whom and where and how holden, is prescribed by title 4 of chapter 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure.”

In this title it is provided as follows, in sections 906 and 907 thereof:

“There are no particular terms of such court, but the same is always open for the transaction of business, according to the mode of proceeding prescribed for it. The mode of proceeding and the rules of evidence are the same in.a justice’s court as in a like action or proceeding in a court of record, except where otherwise specially provided.”

And section 2057 provides that—

“A civil action in a justice’s court is commenced and prosecuted to final determination, and judgment enforced therein, in the manner provided in the Code of Civil Procedure for similar actions in courts of record, except as in this act otherwise provided.”

[293]*293Now, it would hardly be claimed that a court of record in Oregon, having obtained jurisdiction of a cause, would lose the same by death, resignation, or absence of the judge of such court, and the last-named section gives a justice’s court the same power to maintain its jurisdiction that a court of record has, except when otherwise provided. But the same question that is raised in this case has been before the supreme court of Oregon in the case of Knapp v. King, 6 Or. 243, where it is decided that, as a justice’s court is always open for the transaction of business, when it once acquires jurisdiction of the subject-matter of an action, there is always a court to exercise such jurisdiction until it is terminated in some legal manner. In a late case (Southern Pac. Co. v. Russell) reported in 20 Or. 459, 26 P. 304, this decision is approved. In this, case a judgment, in form, was entered in the justice’s court, but it proved to be void for want of jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, and the court vacated it, took up the original complaint, set a day for trial, and issued another or alias summons, and proceeded thereafter to render judgment against the defendant, who took a writ of review to the circuit court, which said court dismissed, and the defendant appealed to the supreme court. But the action of the circuit court was sustained and its decision affirmed. In closing the decision, Lord, J., says:

“It is clear, then, both on authority and principle, that the power of the justice was not exhausted or the case terminated, but that he was authorized to issue an alias summons and acquire jurisdiction of the defendant, which when obtained continued until the case was disposed of legally.”

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. 83, 1 Alaska Fed. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finn-v-hoyt-akd-1892.